Prager U Video: What Is Impeachment? (And How Does It Work?)
A new video from Prager University: Prager U’s Will Witt breaks it down.
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A new video from Prager University: Prager U’s Will Witt breaks it down.
Read MoreBy Alan M. Dershowitz: Senators are empowered by the constitution to begin a trial now— with or without further action by the House.
Read MoreBy William Dodd: The recent impeachment by the U.S. House of Representatives is an accusation that President Trump has committed high crimes — an accusation and nothing more. By law, President Trump is presumed…
Read MoreEditor’s note — an interesting take from Jeff Jacoby: If you’re like most Americans, you don’t think much of Congress.
Read MoreBy Andrew C. McCarthy: Many scholars take the position that the Constitution requires a trial if there has been an impeachment. If such a trial cannot properly occur unless and until articles of impeachment…
Read MoreBy Conrad Black: Do the charges against Trump pass constitutional muster? The justices should decide before the Senate does.
Read MoreBy Mary Margaret Olohan: Conservative radio host Mark Levin said Thursday that Republican Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell should immediately nullify impeachment.
Read MoreBy Mollie Hemingway: Critics of Trump note that no crime is necessary to impeach the president. While that’s true, it speaks to how weak the Democrats’ case against Trump is.
Read MoreA new video from Prager University: The impeachment process was not created to be used as a partisan political weapon but to punish serious misbehavior. Impeachment is not a criminal process. It is not…
Read MoreBy Alan M. Dershowitz: The president, as head of the executive branch, is entitled to challenge in court legislative subpoenas that demand material that may be subject to claims of privilege.
Read MoreBy Myron Magnet: The attorney general channels Madison and Hamilton.
Read MoreBy Sean J. Rosenthal: It was built to favor the ruling class but it ends up restraining all power.
Read MoreBy Jeffrey T. Brown: When God is acknowledged, then natural rights are unalienable. When government is god, then rights are the property of the government.
Read MoreBy John Fund: Adam Carolla and Dennis Prager join figures across the political spectrum to examine the plague of censorship and groupthink emanating from college campuses.
Read MoreBy Robert Curry: For the American Founders, unalienable rights—not property—was the overarching concept. How is this so hard for modern scholars to grasp?
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